Jim Jaffe, a former Congressional staffer who worked on economic, tax and health issues, writes from Washington.

Blog Entries by Jim Jaffe

Why Boo A Political Win?

25 Comments | Posted December 19, 2009 | 07:32 PM (EST)


I'm quite confused about why there's so much bipartisan dissatisfaction with a political system that's functioning so well.

Health reform chugs toward inevitable enactment, following the route that I learned in a civics class some decades ago. The process seems to work and the product, which will slash the number...

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Congress Rocks

4 Comments | Posted November 19, 2009 | 04:17 PM (EST)


Congress is moving at a pace that can fairly be characterized as astonishingly fast to slash the number of Americans who lack health insurance by more than half.

And while it is hardly surprising those who don't want change warn that our legislators aren't moving fast enough,...

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Solons Punt On Health Cost Caps

Posted November 7, 2009 | 12:55 PM (EST)


Congress is making impressive progress toward reducing America's uninsured population, but there's growing reason to believe that new health reforms will do little to constrain costs in the short-run and minimal confidence it will significantly bend the cost increase curve over the longer period.

The message is...

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Let Insiders Make Health Deals

22 Comments | Posted October 6, 2009 | 01:48 PM (EST)


The health reform debate has taken an odd turn. At a time when all the parties with a direct interest - hospitals, doctors, insurers, drug companies - are working toward a political compromise, daunting new roadblocks are created daily by those with a broader political agenda who won't be...

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Doin' The Health Reform Hokey Pokey

Posted September 22, 2009 | 04:14 PM (EST)


Our ability to constrain American health spending may lie in the answer to one basic -- and increasingly contentious question -- whether patients with the same condition basically get the same care whether they are treated by doctors and hospitals in Manhattan or Minneapolis.

If they do, we've...

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How to Lobby a Blue Dog

6 Comments | Posted September 9, 2009 | 02:33 PM (EST)


Is it time for a new approach in lobbying the Blue Dogs?

The evidence suggests so.

For the past six weeks progressives have been warning conservative Democratic -- and moderate Republican -- legislators that failure for vote for a public insurance option will prove that they...

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Why Care About Public Plan?

24 Comments | Posted September 2, 2009 | 11:40 AM (EST)


I'm puzzled by the fuss over including a public plan in health reform and hoping that readers out there-- who feel strongly on either side of the issue -- can help me out.

The idea of a public plan that can help keep the big boys honest...

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Obama, Public Differ on Diagnosis

10 Comments | Posted August 30, 2009 | 01:23 PM (EST)


Because politicians are sensitive to how quickly the window of opportunity can slam shut, they try to seize the moment and move quickly when they can. One cost of this strategy involves attempting to impose a remedy before the patient really understands the diagnosis.

That's one explanation...

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Cutting Care Key to Health Reforms

25 Comments | Posted August 1, 2009 | 08:24 PM (EST)


Among those of us who've abandoned our search for the health-care fairy, there's a realization that the only way to cap costs is to limit care. An unkind and provocative word to characterize that policy is rationing.

In fact, rationing is already pervasive. The challenge lies in doing it...

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Secret's Out -- Our Government Is Rationing Medical Care

65 Comments | Posted July 28, 2009 | 09:40 PM (EST)


There's some sad and shocking news for those who have been manning the ramparts in opposition to health reforms that would allow our government to ration medical care.

The rationing has already begun. Our crafty government has been imposing rules that determines who gets what care for decades. What...

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Why Is the Post Sorry Now?

3 Comments | Posted July 12, 2009 | 01:32 PM (EST)


I'm at a loss over the fuss about the aborted Washington Post salons. It seems to be taking place in a parallel universe that's totally unfamiliar to me.

In my world, politicians and lobbyists who are successful have symbiotic relationships. They regularly visit to discuss how to...

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Time to Talk Tax Hikes

85 Comments | Posted July 11, 2009 | 03:38 PM (EST)


Raising America's taxes is an excellent idea.

House leaders deserve credit for beginning the debate on exactly who should pay how much more and when. Regardless of the outcome, it will make our politics slightly more honest while relieving some internal pressures on the Democratic Party.
...

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Why Wal-Mart Backs Mandatory Health Coverage

14 Comments | Posted July 1, 2009 | 08:07 PM (EST)


Wal-Mart's endorsement of a requirement that employers offer workers health insurance is a reminder that while most employers may resist such a law, those employers who pay most workers already offer insurance and can thus painlessly support the principle.

About half of America's workers are employed by a firm...

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How To Fix Health -- Use Less

6 Comments | Posted June 28, 2009 | 08:38 PM (EST)


No health reform plan will succeed unless it cuts consumption.

Today's debate, with its focus on refighting old wars and settling old scores, is straying from this focus. There's very broad agreement that our national health bill is becoming unaffordable. So unless we cut costs for those now...

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Which Side Are Docs On?

22 Comments | Posted June 21, 2009 | 11:48 AM (EST)


Politicians and physicians share a professional perspective that the painless optimal solution is often out of reach and that they'll have to settle for an imperfect answer than will impose some discomfort.

This quest for the least painful option defines the ongoing dance between doctors and the...

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Joblock -- America's New Epidemic

Posted May 29, 2009 | 02:58 PM (EST)


American workers are apparently a very restless bunch. There could be a political upheaval if Washington doesn't act quickly to guarantee health insurance to all, regardless of who employs them.

That's the gist of a hysterical (in two senses) Reuters story this week concluding that "healthcare...

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Who Said A Good Newspaper Has to Be Affordable?

10 Comments | Posted May 25, 2009 | 04:23 PM (EST)


One of the traditional charms of the New York Times is an untethered audacity that sometimes suggests it lives in a universe very different from the one it reports on. So it was perversely reassuring that the Times has responded to current economic conditions with a double-digit increase in subscription...

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Free Visa -- and MasterCard, Too

9 Comments | Posted May 19, 2009 | 08:20 PM (EST)


Banks say they'll eliminate free credit cards in response to reform legislation limiting their ability to gouge those addicted to credit. I have two simple responses, each a retread of a rejection that succeeded the first time it was used.

The first is "make my day."

The second is, "hell,...

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Proposed Health Premium Tax Exempts Most

4 Comments | Posted May 14, 2009 | 12:36 PM (EST)


Conventional wisdom suggests that taxing employer-paid health programs to finance health reforms is a non-starter because an overwhelming majority -- 85% according to the New York Times -- would confront a tax increase to subsidize coverage for those who now lack it.

Conventional wisdom may...

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Obama Health Rally Useful, But Abets Delusion

1 Comments | Posted May 11, 2009 | 06:51 PM (EST)


As political theater, the spectacle of health care providers joining President Obama in a pledge to constrain medical costs sure beats a rerun of Harry and Louise. And it may well avert an encore performance, which would be a good thing. The anti-Clintoncare commercials were created by providers as a...

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